FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: Financial Background


movement of gold which helped trigger the depression. By 1928,
nearly $500 million in gold was transferred to Europe.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt accepted the advice of England’s
leading economist, John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946), a member of
the Illuminati, who said that deficit spending would be a shot in the
arm to the economy. Most of the New Deal spending programs to fight
economic depression, were based on Keynes theories on deficit
spending, and financed by borrowing against future taxes. In 1910,
Lenin said: “The surest way to overthrow an established social order
is to debauch its currency.” Nine years later, Keynes wrote: “Lenin
was certainly right, there is no more positive, or subtler, no surer
means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the
currency ... The process engages all of the hidden forces of economic
law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner that not one
man in a million is able to diagnose.”

A Presidential Executive Order by Roosevelt on April 5, 1933, required
all the people to exchange their gold coins, gold bullion, and gold-
backed currency, for money that was not redeemable in precious
metals. The Gold Reserve Act of 1934, known as the Thomas
Amendment, which amended the Act of May 12, 1933, made it illegal to
possess any gold currency (which was rescinded December 31, 1974).
Gold coinage was withdrawn from circulation, and kept in the form of
bullion. Just as the public was to return all their gold to the U.S.
Government, so was the Federal Reserve. However, while the people
received $20.67 an ounce in paper money issued by the Federal
Reserve, the Reserve was paid in Gold Certificates. Now the Federal
Reserve, and the Illuminati, had control of all the gold in the country.

In 1934, the value of gold increased to $35 an ounce, which produced a
$3 billion profit for the Government. But when the price of gold
increases, the value of the dollar decreases. Our dollar has not been
worth 100 cents since 1933, when we were taken off of the Gold
Standard. In 1974, our dollar was worth 22-1/2 cents, and in 1983 it was
only worth 38 cents. In 2002, it took $13.88 to buy what cost $1.00 in


  1. Since our money supply had been limited to the amount of gold
    in Treasury reserves, when the value of the dollar decreased, more
    money was printed.

Free download pdf